Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises

The psychological impacts of the climate crisis and its triggers can have long-lasting consequences for public mental health. Many indigenous communities have an in-depth understanding of these impacts, and some of their filmmakers have depicted them through their audiovisual work. By challenging co...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Viviana Ramirez-Loaiza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Climate
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2023.1231794/full
_version_ 1797435525719654400
author Viviana Ramirez-Loaiza
author_facet Viviana Ramirez-Loaiza
author_sort Viviana Ramirez-Loaiza
collection DOAJ
description The psychological impacts of the climate crisis and its triggers can have long-lasting consequences for public mental health. Many indigenous communities have an in-depth understanding of these impacts, and some of their filmmakers have depicted them through their audiovisual work. By challenging colonial perspectives, these indigenous filmmakers offer invaluable insights into how communities might navigate into adaptation and recovery to cope with the challenges brought about by climate change. Unfortunately, audiovisual work has often been overlooked in climate-related disaster studies despite its significant contributions. Drawing on community-based feminism and the decolonial turn, I sought to explore the healing practices employed by communities in Upper Xingu, Brazil, through the practice of indigenous filmmaker Takumã Kuikuro. To achieve this, I drew on audiovisual analysis of Takumã Kuikuro’s documentaries and records (short videos) from the decolonial panorama. Additionally, I conducted semi-structured interviews with the filmmaker and three members of the People’s Palace Projects, who have worked closely with Takumã, culminating in a validation meeting. I highlight three key findings for this article: (i) healing through rituals as esthetic and ethical-sacred practices within the territory, (ii) bodies in collectivism, and (iii) cascading effects on healing audiences: weaving networks from reciprocities. In seeking a discussion of the findings, I contend that there is an inextricable bond between the community-based healing responses to the climate crisis shown by Takumã’s lenses and the Politics of the Bodies proposed by the Colombian philosopher Laura Quintana, allowing us to frame the decolonial understanding of healing as a political and collective action both within and with territories. Therefore, placing the indigenous cinema as a source of knowledge will enable us to bring community-based discussions that disaster risk reduction has neglected due to its embeddedness in epistemic injustice, from which at-risk communities have been predominantly seen as incapable of knowing their geographies. The rituals and collaborative practices grounded in reciprocity demonstrate forms of adaptation in which mental health becomes a collective responsibility woven into nature at its core.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T10:48:33Z
format Article
id doaj.art-849cd53350014dc5b9133a9e2b16577e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2624-9553
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T10:48:33Z
publishDate 2023-11-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Climate
spelling doaj.art-849cd53350014dc5b9133a9e2b16577e2023-12-01T09:39:46ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Climate2624-95532023-11-01510.3389/fclim.2023.12317941231794Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crisesViviana Ramirez-LoaizaThe psychological impacts of the climate crisis and its triggers can have long-lasting consequences for public mental health. Many indigenous communities have an in-depth understanding of these impacts, and some of their filmmakers have depicted them through their audiovisual work. By challenging colonial perspectives, these indigenous filmmakers offer invaluable insights into how communities might navigate into adaptation and recovery to cope with the challenges brought about by climate change. Unfortunately, audiovisual work has often been overlooked in climate-related disaster studies despite its significant contributions. Drawing on community-based feminism and the decolonial turn, I sought to explore the healing practices employed by communities in Upper Xingu, Brazil, through the practice of indigenous filmmaker Takumã Kuikuro. To achieve this, I drew on audiovisual analysis of Takumã Kuikuro’s documentaries and records (short videos) from the decolonial panorama. Additionally, I conducted semi-structured interviews with the filmmaker and three members of the People’s Palace Projects, who have worked closely with Takumã, culminating in a validation meeting. I highlight three key findings for this article: (i) healing through rituals as esthetic and ethical-sacred practices within the territory, (ii) bodies in collectivism, and (iii) cascading effects on healing audiences: weaving networks from reciprocities. In seeking a discussion of the findings, I contend that there is an inextricable bond between the community-based healing responses to the climate crisis shown by Takumã’s lenses and the Politics of the Bodies proposed by the Colombian philosopher Laura Quintana, allowing us to frame the decolonial understanding of healing as a political and collective action both within and with territories. Therefore, placing the indigenous cinema as a source of knowledge will enable us to bring community-based discussions that disaster risk reduction has neglected due to its embeddedness in epistemic injustice, from which at-risk communities have been predominantly seen as incapable of knowing their geographies. The rituals and collaborative practices grounded in reciprocity demonstrate forms of adaptation in which mental health becomes a collective responsibility woven into nature at its core.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2023.1231794/fullhealingaudiovisual artsclimate changemental healthindigenous populationswellbeing
spellingShingle Viviana Ramirez-Loaiza
Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
Frontiers in Climate
healing
audiovisual arts
climate change
mental health
indigenous populations
wellbeing
title Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
title_full Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
title_fullStr Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
title_short Indigenous filmmaking practices: healing in times of climate crises
title_sort indigenous filmmaking practices healing in times of climate crises
topic healing
audiovisual arts
climate change
mental health
indigenous populations
wellbeing
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2023.1231794/full
work_keys_str_mv AT vivianaramirezloaiza indigenousfilmmakingpracticeshealingintimesofclimatecrises